Boris Pokrovsky
Boris Alexandrovich Pokrovsky (Russian: Борис Александрович Покровский; 23 January 1912[1] – 5 June 2009) was a Russian opera director, best known as the stage director of the Bolshoi Theatre between 1943 and 1982.
Career
Pokrovsky was born in Moscow, Russian Empire in 1912. His first production was a staging of Georges Bizet's Carmen in Nizniy Novgorod. He served as the artistic director of the Bolshoi in 1952-1963 and 1973-1982 and was named a People's Artist of the USSR in 1961. His production of Vano Muradeli's opera The Great Friendship was the target of the second Zhdanov Ukase (1948), and it was he who first staged Sergei Prokofiev's War and Peace, in 1946. He took this opera to Italy for its first full staging there, in 1964.
In 1965 in Moscow he directed the first Russian-language production of Benjamin Britten's A Midsummer Night's Dream.
In 1972 Pokrovsky founded the Moscow Chamber Opera Theater with Gennady Rozhdestvensky, and he produced operas such as Igor Stravinsky's The Rake's Progress, Alfred Schnittke's Life with an Idiot, and in 1974 the first Soviet production of Dmitri Shostakovich's The Nose since 1929.
In 1975 he took the Bolshoi Theatre on its first American tour.
Pokrovsky's many awards include four Stalin Prizes (1947, 1948, 1949, 1950), a Lenin Prize (1980), two Orders of Lenin (1967, 1976), Order For Merit to the Fatherland of 3rd (1997), 2nd (2002) and 1st (2007) degree, as well as two State Prizes (1995, 2004).
He was the father of actress Alla Pokrovskaya, father-in-law of [Mariya Lemesheva]], and the grandfather of actor Mikhail Yefremov.[2] His second wife was the soprano Irina Maslennikova.
Boris Pokrovsky died in Moscow in 2009.[3]